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Anesthesia and analgesia · Nov 2022
Differential Alterations to the Metabolic Connectivity of the Cortical and Subcortical Regions in Rat Brain During Ketamine-Induced Unconsciousness.
- Yali Chen, Siyang Li, Xia Liang, and Jun Zhang.
- From the Department of Anesthesiology, Shanghai Cancer Center, Fudan University, Shanghai, China.
- Anesth. Analg. 2022 Nov 1; 135 (5): 110611141106-1114.
BackgroundKetamine anesthesia increased glucose metabolism in most brain regions compared to another intravenous anesthetic propofol. However, whether the changes in cerebral metabolic networks induced by ketamine share the same mechanism with propofol remains to be explored. The purpose of the present study was to identify specific features of metabolic network in rat brains during ketamine-induced subanesthesia state and anesthesia state compared to awake state.MethodsWe acquired fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) images in 20 healthy adult Sprague-Dawley rats that were intravenously administrated saline and ketamine to achieve different conscious states: awake (normal saline), subanesthesia (30 mg kg -1 h -1 ), and anesthesia (160 mg kg -1 h -1 ). Based on the FDG-PET data, the alterations in cerebral glucose metabolism and metabolic topography were investigated by graph-theory analysis.ResultsThe baseline metabolism in rat brains was found significantly increased during ketamine-induced subanesthesia and anesthesia. The graph-theory analysis manifested a reduction in metabolism connectivity and network global/local efficiency across cortical regions and an increase across subcortical regions during ketamine-induced anesthesia (nonparametric permutation test: global efficiency between awake and anesthesia, cortex: P = .016, subcortex: P = .015; global efficiency between subanesthesia and anesthesia, subcortex: P = .012).ConclusionsKetamine broadly increased brain metabolism alongside decreased metabolic connectivity and network efficiency of cortex network. Modulation of these cortical metabolic networks may be a candidate mechanism underlying general anesthesia-induced loss of consciousness.Copyright © 2022 International Anesthesia Research Society.
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